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Vanderbilt Football | Times, Windows Set for Rest of Football Schedule

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Additional game times and windows for Vanderbilt football’s eight SEC games were released by the league office on Wednesday, less than two weeks after kickoff times and television information was announced for the Commodores’ first three contests of the fall. Vandy’s final two nonconference matchups with Georgia State (Sept. 20) and Utah […]

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NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Additional game times and windows for Vanderbilt football’s eight SEC games were released by the league office on Wednesday, less than two weeks after kickoff times and television information was announced for the Commodores’ first three contests of the fall.

Vandy’s final two nonconference matchups with Georgia State (Sept. 20) and Utah State (Sept. 27) will begin at 6:30 p.m. CT and 11:45 a.m., respectively, at FirstBank Stadium, while it was also revealed that the Dores’ game at Texas on Nov. 1 will kick off at 11 a.m.

All other contests in the fall were designated a window of early (11 a.m.-noon), afternoon (2:30-3:30 p.m.), night (5-7 p.m.) or flex (afternoon or night). Flex games, which are limited in scope, will be narrowed to a specific window 12 days prior to kickoff, with precise times and broadcast networks for those matchups announced six days prior to kickoff.

This marks the second season that the SEC will use this system, which was designed to help ESPN and ABC have maximum flexibility to present the top games as the season goes on while also providing more advance knowledge of game timing to assist with game day planning.

2025 Vanderbilt Football Kickoff Times & Windows (all times Central)
Aug. 30 vs. Charleston Southern – 6 p.m. (ESPN+/SEC+)
Sept. 6 at Virginia Tech – 6:30 p.m. (ACCN)
Sept. 13 at South Carolina – 6 or 6:45 p.m. (ESPN or SECN)
Sept. 20 vs. Georgia State – 6:30 p.m. (ESPN2 or ESPNU)
Sept. 27 vs. Utah State – 11:45 a.m. (SECN)
Oct. 4 at Alabama – Flex (2:30-3:30 p.m. OR 5-7 p.m.)
Oct. 18 vs. LSU – Early (11 a.m.-noon)
Oct. 25 vs. Missouri – Flex (2:30-3:30 p.m. OR 5-7 p.m.)
Nov. 1 at Texas – 11 a.m. (ABC or ESPN)
Nov. 8 vs. Auburn – Afternoon (2:30-3:30 p.m.)
Nov. 22 vs. Kentucky – Afternoon (2:30-3:30 p.m.)
Nov. 29 at Tennessee – Afternoon (2:30-3:30 p.m.)

More information on tickets for the Commodores’ 2025 season is available here, while limited seating remains available in the brand-new Commodore Club premium seating in the south end zone.





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Upcoming youth basketball camps at LC State

LEWISTON, ID – Monday is the start of the new LCSC men’s youth skill and development camp. Later that day, it will be the women’s fundamental skills camp. Starting with the men’s and women’s youth camps, the kids receive expert coaching staff, including LC coaches, players, and high school coaches. The goals of the camps […]

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LEWISTON, ID – Monday is the start of the new LCSC men’s youth skill and development camp. Later that day, it will be the women’s fundamental skills camp.

Starting with the men’s and women’s youth camps, the kids receive expert coaching staff, including LC coaches, players, and high school coaches.

The goals of the camps are to focus on and work on the fundamentals and the skill development of the sport.

There are also individual and team competitions that are based on age and ability.

For the men’s youth camp group, it is graded first through sixth, and then for the women’s upcoming camps, it is graded sixth through 12th grade.

This week for the women’s camp has been the junior youth camp, which is grades first through fifth.

One of the coaches, Kendall Wallace, knows that next week’s coaching for the older grades will be different.

“Each summer, when you coach, you see them grow and get bigger. Then our next week’s camp, where we coach and teach the more advanced groups,” Wallace said.

Camp prices are $159 for the men’s youth camp and $150 for the women’s youth camp.

The registration ends on June 26th, which is next Thursday.

Make sure you bring your water bottle, and are encouraged to bring your basketball.

For the men’s youth camps, they run from June 23rd through the 26th at 9-11:30 am.

The women’s camps run from June 23rd through the 26th at 1-4 pm.

If you are interested in registering for the camp, click here.



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Victoria mom takes a stand for youth hockey with new rink petition

Frustrated by lack of rink space, Katie Bernardo has launched a petition to spark change Katie Bernardo has spent the past decade building youth sports in Victoria. Now, she’s drawing attention to what she sees as a major gap in the system. “There is nowhere in Victoria for kids to consistently play ball hockey or […]

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Frustrated by lack of rink space, Katie Bernardo has launched a petition to spark change

Katie Bernardo has spent the past decade building youth sports in Victoria.

Now, she’s drawing attention to what she sees as a major gap in the system.

“There is nowhere in Victoria for kids to consistently play ball hockey or ice hockey. We’re the only municipality in the region without a real multi-use public arena for that,” said Bernardo, who recently stepped down from Greater Victoria Minor Ball Hockey after 10 years.

On June 13, she launched a petition urging the City of Victoria to invest in a new multi-use recreation facility that could accommodate both ice and hard-floor hockey – a project she says is long overdue. In the first five days, the petition had garnered 56 signatures.

“Greater Victoria Minor Ball Hockey has doubled in size since the pandemic. We had to cap registration and turn kids away. Victoria Minor Hockey is in the same boat,” she said. “Parents are frustrated, and kids are missing out.”

For Bernardo, the push is personal.

Her eldest son found community and mentorship through hockey from a young age – something she believes every child should have access to.

That son, Jacob, now 19, suited up for the Victoria Cougars last season and has played in the VIJHL for three years. Bernardo says the mentorship he received early on helped him reach that level.

“It meant so much to us, having that outlet and focus,” she said. “We found great role models, and I think there’s so much potential to help others the same way.”

Of course, building a new arena would come at a cost – likely a significant one.

The city has already committed to major recreation investments, including the long-awaited Crystal Pool replacement, projected to cost between $209 and $215.9 million and not expected to be completed until 2030. That facility will include multi-purpose rooms for sports, dance, fitness, wellness and art.

Another shift is on the way as the downtown YMCA prepares to move from its Broughton and Quadra location to the Bay Centre within the next year.

While neither facility is suited for ball or ice hockey, these changes are expected to place additional strain on recreation space across the city.

Even if Victoria were to build its own multi-use facility, many of Greater Victoria’s major recreation centres were constructed between 1961 and 1977 – a boom era that shaped the region’s infrastructure:

– Archie Browning Sports Centre (1961)

– G.R. Pearkes Recreation Centre (1969)

– Gordon Head Recreation Centre (1971)

– Juan de Fuca Recreation Centre (1972)

– Cedar Hill Recreation Centre (1972)

– Henderson Recreation Centre (1972)

– Esquimalt Recreation Centre (1974)

– Oak Bay Recreation Centre (1975)

– Panorama Recreation Centre (1977)

With that in mind, Bernardo knows a new facility won’t materialize overnight – and she’s OK with that.

“It doesn’t all have to happen now,” she said. “But we need to be planning. We need the conversation to keep going.”

Victoria Coun. Matt Dell agrees.

“There’s no question Victoria needs more public amenities and recreation spaces. Our population is growing, and previous councils didn’t invest enough in these types of facilities,” Dell said.

While the city’s current focus is on replacing Crystal Pool, Dell believes a new multi-sport venue should be next.

“I’d love to see a new indoor sports facility ready within five to 10 years – something that includes indoor courts, soccer fields, and a rink,” he said. “It’s important, and I’m glad residents like Katie are speaking up.”

Bernardo’s petition proposes exploring unused commercial space or incorporating a rink into future development projects.

The Save-On-Foods Memorial Centre (SOFMC), which opened in 2005, does offer public skate times and limited community bookings. But Bernardo says the arena’s packed schedule makes access difficult.

She also sees potential in the SOFMC parking lot as a future site for a new multi-use facility.

Dell says that idea has merit.

“That site is under a long-term contract with a private operator, so we’re limited for now,” he said. “But when that contract ends – in 10 to 15 years – we could build something great there, maybe with underground parking and a new arena above.”

In the meantime, Bernardo plans to present her petition to Mayor Marianne Alto and city council.

She’s also organizing programming through South Island Youth Hockey, with a summer series starting in July at Esquimalt’s Archie Browning Sports Centre and a fall league planned for Eagle Ridge in Langford.

“I’d be thrilled if we could get the ball hockey floor included in any project. That would be a great start,” she said. “At the end of the day, we’re talking about giving kids a safe place to belong. That’s going to benefit the whole community.”



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Bud Hudson Youth Football Working to Grow the League in Hopkinsville

Bud Hudson Youth Football Working to Grow the League in Hopkinsville | WKDZ 751306410 Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_15_0) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/81.0.4044.138 Safari/537.36 b4ffe1f9e3dd8992268c473e2ad910b797b30624 1 Link 0

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Bud Hudson Youth Football Working to Grow the League in Hopkinsville | WKDZ

































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Debo has game plan to reboot Saints boys program with hard work, player development

NEW PHILADELPHIA − Tuscarawas Central Catholic High School was looking for a new boys basketball coach after a late resignation from former head coach Larry Taylor following last season’s 5-16 record. But the Saints quickly adjusted and found the man they wanted by recently selecting Chris Debo as the new Tuscarawas Central Catholic boys basketball […]

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NEW PHILADELPHIA − Tuscarawas Central Catholic High School was looking for a new boys basketball coach after a late resignation from former head coach Larry Taylor following last season’s 5-16 record.

But the Saints quickly adjusted and found the man they wanted by recently selecting Chris Debo as the new Tuscarawas Central Catholic boys basketball head coach.

Debo has served as a varsity assistant coach for the Malvern girls basketball program for the last three years, but brings over 22 years of coaching at multiple levels of basketball. Getting his start with youth basketball, followed by many successful seasons coaching both girls and boys team at the AAU level prior to joining the Malvern girls program.

During the interview process, the Saints were impressed with Debo’s proven track record of excelling in the area of player development and were excited to bring him on board to lead the boys basketball program.

TCC athletic director Mike Sweet pointed out that throughout Debo’s career he has shown a consistent and successful ability to develop the skills and fundamentals of young basketball players at every level.

“Coach Debo brings energy, enthusiasm and his ability to work with kids of all ages up through to the high school level,” Sweet said. “His track record of development is impressive, he has his own basketball academy and has had a lot of successful kids go through his program.

“He has helped develop a lot of highly skilled kids who have excelled at the high school level.. That was a very appealing thing to us, and was a key reason we feel he is the right man to lead our program. We are excited and look forward to some big things with our boys program under his leadership.”

Debo stoked for first varsity coaching job

“This is my first varsity head coaching position,” Debo said. “And I’m very, very excited for this opportunity. It’s something I have dreamed about since my high school days and I feel I’m very well prepared to take it on. I look forward to getting started.”

Debo explained that being in the IVC, he was well aware of Tuscarawas Central Catholic athletics and always liked what he saw of the situation. So once the boys basketball position opened up he was interested right away.

“I’ve been around the IVC and both my daughter and son have played here in this TCC gym for Malvern,” Debo explained. “So I’ve always liked the fan support and passion for their teams. Plus, this felt like home. I went to Catholic school myself, K through 8th grade, growing up.”

“And I always enjoyed that small school feeling in a Catholic school setting. We talked about this opportunity as a family, prayed about it. And all just came to the conclusion it just felt like the right place for us to be. It’s just been great so far, my family and we have been made to feel very welcome. There is a lot of energy from the people we have met and it’s exciting.”

Late start not an issue…time to get to work

With the late hiring and many area summer high school basketball programs well under way, Debo admits its not an ideal situation, but hard work will be needed to make up for lost time.

“We lost a couple of weeks, probably cost a chance to go to some team basketball camps and shoot-outs,” Debo said. “But at the end of the day, you just have to roll with it. You can’t do any thing about it, you lost that time and now you just have to work harder to get caught up. We will work hard and make up that lost time.”

Debo explained he still hopes to put on a basketball camp in the next week or so and will be getting the boys into the gym as quickly as possible.

“We are just going to get in the gym and start to build that teamwork, that fellowship and togetherness you need,” Debo said. “Once you get in the gym, everything else will just take care of its self. Just getting the information out to the kids at all age levels. We want to see them all in the gym and working hard.”

Debo has simple vision for first year

“My goal for each kid once we step into the gym is to get one percent better each day,” Debo said. “That’s the low end goal, but if we can do that I think each kid by the end of the year will be dramatically better. And they are going to have more confidence and a move for basketball that might not have had.”

“And whether that translates into wins or losses I don’t know or really care,” Debo added. “But what we are going to do is play the game of basketball the right way. We are going to have great integrity, great sportsmanship and they are going to be leaders on and off the court.”

KSutton1@gannett.com; X: @KSuttonDJSports; Instagram: kevinsutton_dailyjeffsports



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Unforgettable Opening Act

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — At the start of the academic year, Vanderbilt Chancellor Daniel Diermeier encouraged students to remember they are part of a community “doing remarkable things.” With a common purpose and relying on long-held values, he reminded them, today’s students have the opportunity to set new standards of individual and collaborative excellence.   Vanderbilt student-athletes […]

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Unforgettable Opening Act

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — At the start of the academic year, Vanderbilt Chancellor Daniel Diermeier encouraged students to remember they are part of a community “doing remarkable things.” With a common purpose and relying on long-held values, he reminded them, today’s students have the opportunity to set new standards of individual and collaborative excellence.  

Vanderbilt student-athletes spent the ensuing months showing the campus, conference and country just how remarkable Commodores can be.    

Compete against the best? Lead the way? Live up to a legacy?  

No matter the circumstances, each victory and accolade spoke to the same theme, the statement growing louder as team after team and athlete after athlete met the moment.  

This is who we are. This is what we do. This is Vanderbilt.  

“This memorable year is further proof of what is possible for Vanderbilt Athletics,” said Candice Storey Lee, vice chancellor for athletics and university affairs and athletic director. “Across each of our sports, Vanderbilt student-athletes, coaches and staff competed with a tireless commitment to reaching the full heights of their potential. Commodores challenged each other to grow, and what they achieved, together, challenges all of us to be relentless in pursuit of even better days.”    

From every corner of the Frist Athletics Village to the fairways of Vanderbilt Legends Club and beyond, from the Birmingham Bowl to an SEC title in Hoover to NCAA Tournaments aplenty, Vanderbilt student-athletes and teams transformed 2024–25 into a year that will live long in the memory and a blueprint for even bolder ambitions ahead.  

“I commend our student-athletes, coaches and staff on their hard work and remarkable achievements,” Diermeier said. “Working together to make each other better as a paradigm of radical collaboration, Vanderbilt student-athletes set new standards of excellence and brought us together as sports uniquely can. They remind us of what it means to dare to grow. As we embrace new models that support excellence in education, research and athletics alike, underscored by our recent launch of Vanderbilt Enterprises, we remain proud but not satisfied.”   

Championship Collaboration 

Nearly 75 percent of Vanderbilt programs either competed in NCAA Championships or bowl games or saw student-athletes advance to NCAA Championships.  

In some cases, success meant going where no Vanderbilt team had gone before. When E. Bronson Ingram Chair in Football Clark Lea’s team memorably defeated No. 1 Alabama on Oct. 5, the 40-35 victory marked the first time in program history that the Commodores took down the nation’s top-ranked team.  

Soon thereafter, head coach Darren Ambrose’s women’s soccer team secured the program’s first Sweet 16 appearance by eliminating No. 1 seed Florida State in Tallahassee, Florida, in the second round of the NCAA Tournament  

And for the first time ever, Vanderbilt’s football and men’s and women’s basketball teams were all ranked nationally during the same academic year.  

Success also required reclaiming ground. Proving itself far more than a one-week wonder, football reached its first bowl game since 2018 and claimed its first bowl title since 2013 by outlasting both Georgia Tech and inclement weather in the Birmingham Bowl.  

In head coach Mark Byington’s first season, men’s basketball defeated four top-15 opponents for the first time since the 1980s. And when head coach Shea Ralph’s women’s basketball team reached the NCAA Tournament for the second season in a row, it meant that men’s and women’s basketball shared March Madness for the first time since 2012.  

Success also requires maintaining established excellence, something that is harder than ever as competition grows more fierce. Head coach Tim Corbin’s VandyBoys won the SEC Tournament for the fifth time overall, the fourth time under Coach Corbin and the third time in the past six tournaments—en route to a national-best 19th consecutive NCAA Tournament.  

Remarkably, the VandyBoys don’t even have sole possession of the longest postseason streak on campus: Head coach John Williamson led women’s bowling to the NCAA Tournament for the 19th consecutive season.   

Thomas F. Roush, M.D., and Family Men’s Golf head coach Scott Limbaugh led his team to the NCAA Championships for the 11th consecutive year, while the women’s golf team turned a stirring regional comeback into a fourth consecutive trip to the NCAA Championships.  

Individual Inspiration   

What was the most Vanderbilt moment of the year? The celebration that spilled into the Cumberland River? Back-to-back basketball wins against Tennessee in the span of scarcely 24 hours? There are many worthy candidates. But it’s hard to do better than Mikayla Blakes setting an NCAA Division I women’s basketball record for most points in a game by a true freshman—and then breaking it two weeks later with 55 points against Auburn, to set the women’s record for all freshmen and any SEC player 

Maybe it was women’s tennis’ Célia-Belle Mohr becoming the first student-athlete in that championship-winning program’s history to be honored as a five-time All-American. The Frenchwoman swept to singles and doubles honors alongside freshman Sophia Webster.  

Proud but not satisfied, indeed.  

As the conference and the country took notice, Vanderbilt earned respect. Blakes earned the Tamika Catchings Award as the nation’s best freshman. Lea’s peers honored him as SEC Coach of the Year, and mesmerizing quarterback Diego Pavia was named SEC Newcomer of the Year.  

Mark H. Carter and Family Vanderbilt Men’s Basketball Head Coach Mark Byington was named 2025 Skip Prosser Man of the Year in recognition of his success on the court and his exemplary moral integrity. 

Even the architect got in on the action: Lee was a recipient of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics AD of the Year Award and one of five finalists for the Sports Business Journal Athletic Director of the Year.  

Mark H. Carter and Family Vanderbilt Men’s Basketball Head Coach Mark Byington was named 2025 Skip Prosser Man of the Year in recognition of his success on the court and his exemplary moral integrity. 

Even the architect got in on the action: Lee was a recipient of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics AD of the Year Award and one of five finalists for the Sports Business Journal Athletic Director of the Year.  

Community Building  

Commodore Nation was front and center throughout the year. Fans filled FirstBank Stadium to capacity for five of football’s seven home games. Memorial Magic took on new life—and new decibels—throughout basketball season. Around Nashville and across the country, text message chains blew up and old friends reconnected as the Dores thrived.  

That’s the power of sport, its ability to bring people together. But as the past year proved, that’s a two-way street. The power of a community brought Vanderbilt to new heights.  

Vanderbilt dedicated the state-of-the-art Huber Center for men’s and women’s basketball, made possible by George and Cathy Huber and legions of Commodore fans who continue to support Vandy United, part of the Dare to Grow campaign.  

Alumnus Mark H. Carter, who spent some of his favorite undergraduate hours in Memorial’s student section, endowed the men’s basketball head coaching position.  

Former Vanderbilt All-American and NFL standout Casey Hayward committed the largest- ever philanthropic gift by a football alumnus who played professionally.  

Vanderbilt supporters didn’t just come along for the ride in 2024–25. They fueled the rocket.  

Now, a new year awaits. And with it, following final approval of the House settlement, a new era of collegiate athletics. Even as Commodores reached new competitive heights this past year, preparations continued to lead the way and create the conditions for success in the new model. In May, Vanderbilt appointed global hospitality leader Markus Schreyer as CEO of the new Vanderbilt Enterprises, which has an initial focus on enhancing Vanderbilt Athletics resources, support for student-athletes and the fan experience. 

From the opening serve of volleyball’s first home game on Wyatt Lawn, 2025–26 is again sure to be a year unlike any other.  

Because more than anything, 2024–25 proved that we’re just getting started. 

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Libby native Ryggs Johnston hosts youth golf camp ahead of appearance in British Open | Montana High School Sports

One of the Treasure State’s top young golfers, set to participate in the British Open in July, is sharing his experience in hopes of building the next generation of great golfing pros from Montana. DJ Bauer SWX Local Sports Reporter ANACONDA, Mont. — It’s not every day that a Montanan drive, chips, […]

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One of the Treasure State’s top young golfers, set to participate in the British Open in July, is sharing his experience in hopes of building the next generation of great golfing pros from Montana.




ANACONDA, Mont. — It’s not every day that a Montanan drive, chips, and putts his way into one of golf’s four majors. But maybe, with a little help, it can become a more regular occurrence.

At least, that’s the hope for Ryggs Johnston, hoping to impart some of his own championship-winning knowledge on the Treasure State’s next generation of golfers.

From his four consecutive high school state titles at Libby, to a Pac-12 team championship with Arizona State, to last December’s victory in the Australian Open, it’s become evident what Johnston can do with a golf club in his hands.

But on Wednesday at Anaconda’s Old Works, Johnston instead put the club in the hands of aspiring junior golfers and said, “show me what you got.”

“It’s something I feel like I didn’t have much of growing up, a kind of role model or someone to help me through junior golf,” Johnston said. “It kind of felt like I was on my own. So, I want to be able to be someone these kids can look up to, ask questions, and learn from… and hopefully follow and do better things than I’m doing.”

With the help of Montana State standouts Cora and Hannah Rosanova, Johnston’s Future Phenoms camp aims to provide teens with the skills, strategies, and confidence needed to go from good to great.

It’s all the same stuff that’s allowed Johnston to parlay his start in little Libby, Montana, into a chance to show the world what he’s got at the British Open next month.

“I think it just shows in itself that anything’s possible, as long as you work hard, believe in yourself, and surround yourself with people that believe in you,” Johnston said. “Who would have thought that I would be playing in The Open? And it’s possible for any of [these junior golfers] too.”

As Johnston prepares for the biggest tournament of his life, maintaining the mentality he teaches is more meaningful than ever.

“It’s just the normal stuff,” Johnston said. “I’m going to be playing in three tournaments before The Open–I actually leave Saturday for Italy.”

“I’ll just try to get better every day, and hopefully, the game comes around at the right time,” Johnston continued.

We’ll see if Johnston can do Montana proud when The Open tees off from Royal Portrush Golf Club in Northern Ireland on July 17.



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